Skip to content
Grist home
All donations DOUBLED
  • Food-movement doc screens March 28 in Emerald City; Philpott, Alice Waters to attend

    So, I’m featured as a talking head in a documentary on the sustainable-food movement called Food Fight. Other folks who appear include Michael Pollan, Alice Waters, and Dan Barber.  Food Fight will be screening this coming Saturday, March 28, 7 pm,  in Seattle as part of Green Festival. I’ll be attending the screening, and moderating […]

  • Grist board member appointed to Obama administration

    On Wednesday, the Obama administration officially announced that Grist board member and Ford Foundation program officer Michelle DePass has been nominated to serve as the assistant administrator for international affairs at the Environmental Protection Agency. Michelle currently manages the Ford Foundation’s initiative on Environmental Justice and Healthy Communities, concentrating on the intersections of environmental and […]

  • Economists rip off climatologists, get away with it

    As if we didn't have enough problems with the atmosphere, now along come economists to rip off the rhetoric of climatology. Or so I argue in an op-ed in the Ventura County Star. Here's the "nut graph," as they say in journalism:

    The more we discuss the economic crisis in terms of the physical world, the less we discuss the climate crisis itself, even though restoring balance in the atmosphere will be far more difficult than reviving the faltering economy. It's an alarming irony. As we worry about our melting savings and our vanishing jobs, we forget about melting icecaps and vanishing species.

    If you like to double-check sources, check out a linked version of the op-ed.

  • Your intrepid blogger heads to yet another green conference; promises to twitter some tweets

    I'm at the airport, getting ready to head out to Santa Barbara for the second annual Wall Street Journal Eco:nomics conference. (Yes, flying on planes makes me a big fat hypocrite earthf*cker -- I eagerly await my NYT profile.)

    WSJ Eco:nomics

    The WSJ conference is interesting, mainly due to the contrasting influences of the top-notch WSJ news team and the WSJ editorial board, world headquarters for unrepentant far-right fruitcakes. So you get Al Gore and Amory Lovins, but then you also get Bjorn Lomborg and Vaclav Klaus. (Klaus gets the last word, with his session titled "Global Reality Check: From Europe to China to the U.S., how realistic is a big green push amid an imploding economy?" Anybody care to guess his answer in advance?)

    In between you have an interesting mix of truly innovative and green-minded business leaders and ... business leaders primarily concerned with positioning themselves to profit from whatever happens next. Thus you get sessions like the hilariously titled, "Power Play: What will keep the lights on: nuclear energy or 'clean coal'?" Whee!

    The really big news here -- and you'll want to notify all your friends and family about this ASAP -- is that I'll be twittering from the conference.

    OMG! you say. OMFG! you add. Yes, it's true. I'll be delving into the brave new world of 2008, because clearly the main flaws of blogging are its excessive length, depth, and grammatical exactitude!

    I don't even know enough about Twitter to tell you how to follow my twittering. But if you happen to know how, it's all going on under the name david_h_roberts.

    Again: david_h_roberts. Feel the Future!

    [Note from more tech-savvy editor: David's Twitter feed is here. And right below.]

  • Join new climate-action Facebook application, win rewards

    If you haven't already heard, Grist is tickled to be the editorial sponsor of Hot Dish, a climate change news-'n'-activism Facebook app that has all the cool kids talking. It's the brainchild of online social media and news aggregator NewsCloud, made possible by a grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. (Yours truly even had a hand in it.) Hot Dish is where online news meets real-world action to fight climate change.

    Grist helps drive the conversation around the day's top climate change news, and Hot Dish enables users to share it with each other within the comfy confines of Facebook. But wait -- there's more! Users can join the Action Team to complete challenges and earn points by, say, writing to a congressperson, setting up composting, or volunteering with an environmental group.

  • Takin' it to the streets … of NPR

    I was on NPR's "News & Notes" program last week, talking about Obama's green stimulus. Listen if you dare.

  • Online climate chat: Tuesday, Feb. 10, at 12:45 pm CST

    This Tuesday (Feb. 10, 2009) I'll be doing an online chat over on Eric Berger's SciGuy website. We'll be talking about climate, climate change, and everything else climate related. It will be at 12:45 pm CST. If you can't make it, the transcript will be posted (I'll put a link to it in the comments).

  • Win an eco-Valentine's Day package valued over $400

    Grist Local banner

    Subscribe to our weekly Seattle email -- a guide to the green scene in our hometown -- for your chance to win dinner for two at Stumbling Goat Bistro, an organic bouquet from TerraBella Flowers, the organic Aphrodisiac Collection from Theo Chocolate, and a private tour of the Theo Chocolate factory.

    giveaway adIt's everything you need for the perfect green Valentine's Day ... except for an actual valentine, of course. (Good luck with that!)

    Plus, by signing up for the Grist Local email, you'll learn about upcoming events, sustainable businesses in the area, and important political goings-on -- all zapped straight to your inbox every week. Each email also features an interactive event map, local green job listings, and news links that will keep you informed about eco-issues throughout the Puget Sound region.

    Already a Grist Local subscriber? Invite a few friends to sign up, and you'll be entered, too.

    The deadline is 3 p.m. next Tuesday, Feb. 10, so sign up now!

  • I write book reviews and talk on the radio

    Because too much Roberts is never enough:

    What seems like a million years ago (I'll never get used to paper media schedules), I wrote a review of Van Jones' new book The Green Collar Economy: How One Solution Can Fix Our Two Biggest Problems for In These Times. It's up now, with the somewhat unfortunate headline "It's Not Easy Becoming Green." (Note to eco-headline writers: no more Kermit references; no more inconvenient-anything references; no more "green is the new X.") Of course you'll want to read every scintillating word, but the basic thrust is, Van Jones in person is an unbelievable dynamo who's reshaping the political landscape in extraordinary ways; Van Jones in his book is rather flat and prosaic. With a few exceptions, it's difficult to hear the former's voice in the latter.

    In other Roberts news, I appeared on the Liberal Oasis radio show while I was in D.C., discussing prospects for green legislation in coming years. My mellifluous tones and perspicacious insights are available via a variety of electronic delivery options: iTunes / XML feed / MP3. You should subscribe to the podcast -- host Bill Scher is a top notch thinker and communicator.